For anyone who followed the market crashes of 2000-2002 and 2007-2009--especially the crash of 2007-2009--the 512-point drop in the Dow feels awfully familiar.

And as those market crashes reminded us, the downdrafts can last a lot longer and be a lot more severe than most people initially think.

(They can also reverse themselves quickly and unexpectedly, and maybe that's what will happen this time. We can always pray.)

But there are also several very important differences between this market crash and the ones a few years ago:

The Fed has fired most of its bullets (interest rates are already at zero)

Our budget deficit is already out of control, and Congress has had it with "stimulus"

The public has had it with bailouts

That means the government's ability to do anything about this market crash is severely limited.

Yes, we'll almost certainly have a "QE3." And maybe that will prop things up a bit. But it won't fix the fundamental problems clogging the economy, just as QE1 and QE2 didn't permanently fix anything. (The only thing that will fix our economy is debt-reduction, discipline, and time.)

To get a good sense of how hamstrung the government is, you need only look as far back as last week, when Congress was so paralyzed that it almost put the country into default rather than raise the debt ceiling.

And you also need only note that, when the 2000 crash began, the US federal budget was running a surplus, and when the 2007 crash began, the deficit was only $200 billion. Now, the deficit's about $1.4 trillion:

Meanwhile, to get a good sense of how different the Fed's position is now than it was at the start of the last two market crashes, all you have to do is look at the chart below.

In 2000, when the market tanked, the Fed Funds rate was 6.5%. The Fed immediately began cutting rates and eventually took them all the way down to 1%. (Where it left them for far too long, thus helping to inflate the housing bubble.)

In 2007, when the market began to crack, the Fed Funds rate was 5.25%. The Fed immediately began cutting rates and eventually took them all the way down to 0.25%. Where they have been as long as anyone can remember. And where they still are today, just as the market is beginning to crash again.

Recommended For You

The Board Room

Editors' Picks

The path forward is the same today after the market crashing as it was a year ago: the Fed will monetize our massive liabilities and distribute those losses through the global financial system via the dollar reserve currency (the soon to be former reserve currency). Through inflation they'll devalue the American standard of living by half over the next 10 to 15 years, if not faster. The only options were to completely default on the entitlements or to devalue the dollar so the payout is slashed in real terms. The verdict remains out on whether they can inflate fast enough at this point to avoid defaulting in the next few years on SS and medicare.

Nothing has fundamentally changed in any regard from two or three years ago (except perhaps gotten far worse). This was always the outcome. Some people just deluded themselves into thinking printing magic Federal Reserve Notes and firing off POMO shots to fake a stock market boom is a legitimate means to bolster an economy.

QE3 won't be about helping the economy just like QE1 and QE2 were not. Thirty years ago everybody understood what QE is: debt monetization. It's about trying to keep the US Government solvent for a while longer, it has nothing to do with fulfilling the Fed's dual mandates.